1949–50 Austrian football championship

The Austrian Football Championship 1949/50, was hosted by the Austrian Football Association - State League. As substructure for League A total of six different leagues, which were connected via a comprehensive Relegation Round.

League A

The Austrian Cup Season 1949/50, was a duel between Rapid and Austria, which ended in favor of the purple title defense. The Austria was for the fourth time an Austrian football champions. Rapid began with a victory run to the end of the season - including a 4-2 head to head in front of 55,000 spectators at the Prater Stadium - the Austria still under pressure and was the penultimate round with their equal points. A surprisingly clear 2:5 defeat against Admira brought Hütteldorfer finally out of the race, because you had to the last round up for those lost two points again and overcome a 11- Torediffereinz. This task was too big, it was followed by another 1:4 loss to Wacker, the Austria settled thereafter in the "Master - show," but also from the Vienna shoot as 4:1.

Champion Team: Friedrich Nicolai, Paul Schweda - Otto Melchior, Ferdinand Popelka, Friedrich Kleibl - Oskar Fischer, Leopold Mikolasch, Serious Ocwirk, Siegfried Joksch, Rudolf Böhme - Ernst Melchior, Friedrich Kominek, Raimund Richter, Adolf Huber, Ernst Stojaspal, Luke Aurednik - coach: Heinrich Müller

Expulsion

Due to the reform of the second game stage towards a B league ( from the second class and the state leagues of Lower Austria, Styria and Upper Austria ) a Arlberg League ( from the national league Tyrol and Vorarlberg ) and the retention of the Tauern League was a comprehensive Relegation round this season interposed for promotion to the A- League. Group I consisted of the master of the national league of Lower Austria, Styria and Burgenland, last was allowed to participate even though he was not a second division. In group II, the winner of the Tauern League, the Upper Austrian national champion and the winner of the preliminary round between Vorarlberg and Tyrol's national champion played. In addition, the winner of the Second Class went straight on into the A- League. Here at it was Elektra, to which over the relegation Wr. Neustadt and LASK joined.

Second stage game

First Class ( hosted by the Lower Austrian Football Association ) in 1911/12 ∙ 1912/13 ∙ 1913/14 ∙ 1914/15 ∙ 1915/16 ∙ 1916/17 ∙ 1917/18 ∙ 1918/19 ∙ 1919/20 ∙ 1920/21 ∙ 1921/22 ∙ 1922/23,

First Class ( Vienna Football Association): 1923/24 ∙ 1924/25 ∙ 1925/26 ∙ 1926/27 ∙ 1927/28 ∙ 1928/29 ∙ 1929/30 ∙ 1930/31 ∙ 1931/32 ∙ 1932/33 ∙ 1933/34, ∙ 1934/35 ∙ 1935/36,

National Football League ( Vienna Football Association): 1936/37 ∙ 1937/38,

Gauliga ( NS time ): 1938/39 ∙ 1939/40 ∙ 1940/41 ∙ 1941/42 ∙ 1942/43 ∙ 1943/44 ∙ 1944/45,

League ( Vienna Football Association): 1945/46 ∙ 1946/47 ∙ 1947/48 ∙ 1948/49,

State League ( gesamtösterreichisch ): 1949/50 ∙ 1950/51 ∙ 1951/52 ∙ 1952/53 ∙ 1953/54 ∙ 1954/55 ∙ 1955/56 ∙ 1956/57 ∙ 1957/58 ∙ 1958/59 ∙ 1959/60 ∙ 1960 / 61 ∙ 1961/62 ∙ 1962/63 ∙ 1963/64 ∙ 1964/65

National League: 1965/66 ∙ 1966/67 ∙ 1967/68 ∙ 1968/69 ∙ 1969/70 ∙ 1970/71 ∙ 1971/72 ∙ 1972/73 ∙ 1973/74

Bundesliga: 1974/75 ∙ 1975/76 ∙ 1976/77 ∙ 1977/78 ∙ 1978/79 ∙ 1979/80 ∙ 1980/81 ∙ 1981/82 ∙ 1982/83 ∙ 1983/84 ∙ 1984/85 ∙ 1985/86 ∙ 1986/87 ∙ 1987/88 ∙ 1988/89 ∙ 1989/90 ∙ 1990/91 ∙ 1991/92 ∙ 1992/93 ∙ 1993/94 ∙ 1994/95 ∙ 1995/96 ∙ 1996/97 ∙ 1997/98 ∙ 1998 / 99 ∙ 1999/2000 ∙ 2000/ 01 ∙ 2001/ 02 ∙ 2002/ 03 ∙ 2003/ 04 ∙ 2004/ 05 ∙ 2005/ 06 ∙ 2006/ 07 ∙ 2007/ 08 ∙ 2008/ 09 ∙ 2009/10 ∙ 2010/11 ∙ 2011/12 ∙ 2012/13 ∙ 2013/14

  • Football in 1949
  • Football in 1950
  • Austrian Football Championship
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